Pubdate: Mon, 27 Dec 2004 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2004 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Note: does not publish LTEs from outside their circulation area Author: Deborah Yetter Series: Meth - A Rising Blight (Part 2E) Toxic Hazards METH LABS ARE PERILOUS, CAN SCAR ENVIRONMENT Cleanup Costs Sap State Resources Meth labs pose a significant environmental hazard because they use and generate such toxic chemicals as ammonia, hydrochloric acid, solvents and lye. Methamphetamine labs create five to six pounds of toxic waste for every pound of drugs produced, according to the University of Kentucky Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service. Volatile substances used can cause fires and explosions, a particular problem because labs typically are makeshift, set up in apartments, hotel rooms, outbuildings or even in vans or cars. Waste from labs can contaminate vehicles, buildings, air, groundwater and well water, and it is linked to respiratory, kidney and liver damage and birth defects. Most labs are abandoned when the operators are finished. "Never enter what you suspect to be a meth lab," warns a booklet produced by the Cooperative Extension Service. "If you find yourself inside one, leave immediately." Such operations are expensive to clean up, officials say. Indiana State Police report that the cost of removing chemicals from meth labs is more than $4.5million a year, according to a state task force. Kentucky estimates its cost at $500 a lab - a cost it has reduced significantly by using large storage containers at a single location to hold chemicals for pickup. Before that, it cost at least $3,500 a lab - including the costs of keeping officers at the site until crews could arrive to pick up the chemicals, said Maj. Mike Sapp of the Kentucky State Police. Meth labs often are located in remote or rural areas and pose a significant environmental hazard, the extension service said. Anyone suspecting a meth lab or meth activity is encouraged to call the Kentucky State Police at (800) 222-5555. In Indiana, the state police methamphetamine hotline is (800) 453-4756. More information on meth and meth labs may be found at the UK extension service Web site: www.ca.uky.edu/heel/. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth